1. The 2011 Digital Marketer:
Benchmark and Trend Report
Connect with today’s unique and empowered customers
2. Foreword
This past year, we’ve seen and experienced remarkable change in terms of the
economy and its effect on consumers and marketers alike. The emergence of
new media and an ever-growing population of highly connected and empowered
consumers has challenged brands to work smarter and more effectively to stay
engaged and relevant. In this environment of constant, hyper-innovation, very little
remains the same.
The broad availability of smartphones, and the iPad along with the rest of the
tablets, is set to revolutionize the opportunities for mobile marketing. Other
dramatic changes that occurred in 2010 that will have long lasting impact on
how we market to consumers include the dominance of Facebook, the dramatic
growth of group buying sites and the renaissance of addressable advertising.
Technical innovations aside, we’ll also need to account for and recover from
our unprecedented focus on steep discounting as the antidote to consumers’
unwillingness to spend.
The fundamentals of today’s consumer-driven market have been altered to the
point that some economists are saying that many of us have re-calibrated our
purchase behavior to a “new-normal” of reduced discretionary income, low home
values, and less willingness to take on debt. The economic outlook for 2011 is
mixed, as rising consumer confidence and spending is at risk of being stifled by
increasing oil prices.
So, given the complexity of digital channels, the myriad of customer data and
changing consumer behavior, what will make for a successful digital marketing
strategy in 2011? The only answer is to focus on a better understanding of
our customer.
In the pages that follow, you’ll find detailed analysis and data drawn from the
breadth of experience and expertise of Experian Marketing Services, a leader in
digital marketing.
In 2011, there’s one thing you can count on — change will endure. At Experian
Marketing Services we look forward to being your partner in navigating that change
through a better understanding about consumers and the best way to engage them.
Cheers to successfully marketing forward.
Bill Tancer
General Manager, Global Research, Experian Marketing Services
Author of Click: What Millions of People Are Doing Online and Why It Matters
3. Experian Marketing Services helps leading organizations connect,
engage and empower customers to be loyal and active brand
advocates through a full suite of digital marketing capabilities.
6. Table of contents
Introduction .......................................................................................... 1
Meeting the challenges of uncertainty ............................................. 2
Consumer insight............................................................................... 13
Key findings ........................................................................................................13
Technological novices going digital .................................................................14
Most common uses of digital .............................................................................14
Cell phones vs. television....................................................................................16
Surprising findings on American consumer credit........................................17
Discretionary spending segment quick tips ....................................................17
Wealthy Americans search for deals................................................................18
Word of mouth influential in driving purchases..............................................18
Mom’s influence on household purchases ......................................................19
Positive results for Hispanic targeted emails ..................................................20
Hispanic mobile phone usage represents “mobile” generation ..................23
Addressable advertising .................................................................. 25
Key findings ........................................................................................................25
Evolution of the online display advertising market .........................................26
Addressable advertising growing at rapid pace .............................................28
The next evolution, integrated campaigns .......................................................28
Case study: targeted online advertising, finance............................................29
Steps to compete in digital advertising ............................................................30
Case study: targeted online advertising, retail................................................31
Email..................................................................................................... 33
Key findings ........................................................................................................33
Value of email continues to climb ......................................................................34
Emails consumers are most likely to open .......................................................35
“Friends-and-family” email performance ........................................................36
Email subject line influence on revenue ...........................................................39
Performance of holiday-related email...............................................................42
Tips for improving email data quality ................................................................48
Case study: improving email data quality.........................................................48
Mobile .................................................................................................. 49
Key findings ........................................................................................................49
Mobile market growing at rapid pace ................................................................50
7. Key mobile trends .................................................................................................51
Consumers receptive to mobile ads ..................................................................52
Most popular mobile activities ...........................................................................53
Consumer adoption of mobile purchasing ......................................................54
Most popular mobile shopping locations ........................................................55
Case study: mobile couponing...........................................................................56
Smartphone consumer affinity for gaming and entertainment....................57
Targeting behavior of mobile consumers ........................................................58
Reach of text messaging .....................................................................................59
Reaching affluent consumers with tablets ......................................................60
Social ................................................................................................... 61
Key findings ........................................................................................................61
Social networks surging over search ................................................................62
Older adults using social networking ...............................................................64
Combining social media and email ...................................................................65
Online shoppers’ use of social networks .........................................................66
Search.................................................................................................. 67
Key findings ........................................................................................................67
Google’s share of search market ......................................................................68
Search query word use ........................................................................................69
Adult online comparison shopping...................................................................69
Increase in traffic to flash sales Websites ......................................................70
Tips for improving conversion optimization online ........................................71
Multichannel customer experience ................................................. 73
Key findings ........................................................................................................73
Marketer’s needs...................................................................................................74
Offline data leverage tactics ...............................................................................74
Pairing direct mail with mobile engages your audience ................................75
Contact data inaccuracies ..................................................................................76
Best practices for multichannel marketing ......................................................77
Bad data equals bad business results ..............................................................78
Data quality quick tips .........................................................................................79
Multichannel marketing integration quick tips ............................................... 80
8.
9. Introduction
Today’s digital marketing channels, such as email, search, mobile phones,
addressable advertising, online communities and social media, give
marketers the ability to know their target audience in greater depth than
ever before and to foster customer engagement effectively, in real time.
When fused with these channels, consumer insight, benchmark data and
analytical expertise can help marketers create meaningful and precisely
targeted communications that will amplify customer advocacy and drive
greater return on investment (ROI) now and into the future. The findings,
projections and recommendations within this report provide actionable
and unique insights for the progressive digital marketer.
An Experian benchmark and trend report | Page 1
10. Meeting the challenges of uncertainty in 2011
Consumers remain “cautiously optimistic”
Moving into the second quarter of 2011, key indicators about consumers’
expectations and spending confirm continued economic uncertainty.
While consumer spending, which accounts for roughly 70 percent of our
economy, looked strong for the fourth quarter of 2010, a Gallup poll1 paints
a darker picture for the new year, reporting that daily spend was down
significantly the first two weeks of January.
Facing another year of “cautious optimism” will mean another year of
margin pressure as marketers seek to drive growth through increased
advertising expenditures. However, the reaction to the recession over the
past three years where marketers slashed prices across the board in a race
to attract cautious consumers needs to be replaced with a more rational
approach that is tailored to their target consumer.
In fact, this approach is supported by our data revealing that consumers’
economic outlook and resulting purchase behaviors differ by a multitude of
factors including their age, gender, income and socio-economic status.
In an environment of significant change in consumer behavior and the
expectations of businesses to grow, the path to increased profitability
for marketers in 2011 will be based on a better understanding of their
customers and key purchase drivers beyond price.
The negative correlation between age and economic optimism
To understand consumers’ heterogeneous response to market conditions,
Experian Marketing Services developed the Experian Consumer
Expectation Index (CEI), leveraging our National Consumer Study of more
than 25,000 adults. By employing Experian Simmons DataStream, we have
the ability to dissect, on a weekly basis, economic sentiment by more than
8,000 variables, from basic demographics to attitudinal variables.
Analyzing consumers’ expectations of their economic future illustrates
that there is a near-perfect negative correlation between age and economic
optimism. In other words, the older consumers get, the more pessimistic
they are about the health of the economy.
1
Gallup, U.S. Consumer Spending Down Sharply in Early January, January 2011
Page 2 | The 2011 digital marketer
11. Experian Consumer Expectation Index (by age)
105
100
95
90
85
80
75
70
11/02/2009
11/05/2007
11/03/2008
11/08/2010
05/03/2010
07/05/2010
09/08/2008
01/05/2009
02/02/2009
03/09/2009
05/04/2009
09/07/2009
03/08/2010
09/06/2010
03/03/2008
07/07/2008
01/04/2010
01/07/2008
05/05/2008
07/06/2009
Age 18–34 Age 35–49 Age 50–64 Age 65+
Assuming that there is a link between economic outlook and price
sensitivity, the key takeaways for digital marketers are that when marketing
to consumers between the ages of 18 and 49, deep price discounts are less
important than when marketing to consumers over the age of 50.
One of the counterintuitive findings regarding age is that, despite recent
positive news surrounding the end of the recession, the economic
outlook gap between younger and older consumers is widening. The key
takeaway — focusing on price when marketing to 18- to 24-year-olds will
most likely result in leaving money on the table.
A better understanding of customers and how their economic viewpoint
changes over time is only the first step to becoming a well-informed
digital marketer.
Change in household composition: Boomers and Boomerangs
In the USPS® publication Deliver, renowned demographic analyst Peter
Francese states: “There is no longer an average American. When I was a
child, people used to talk about John Doe; he was the average American in
a relatively even society. Today, we are not just a multicultural nation, but
also a multisegmented nation and a multigenerational society.”2
2
USPS, Deliver: Volume 7, February 2011
An Experian benchmark and trend report | Page 3
12. Experian Mosaic3 segmentation reveals in-depth nuances to the evolving
multisegmented American household. In a new Mosaic segment, Boomers
and Boomerangs, adult children are returning home to live with their baby
boomer parents due to economic pressures. Analysis of the composition
for these households indicates that elderly parents are also moving in with
their boomer children to reduce elder-care costs.
At a time when precision is becoming critical to relevant customer
communication, it is imperative that marketers understand shifts in
household composition and how that changes the way they market
to consumers.
As we’ve seen before, taking Boomers and Boomerangs as an example,
certain conclusions are intuitive, such as the cost-saving behavior of the
multigenerational household. For example, this segment indexes high
for using coupons from newspapers (138) and coupons from in-store
packages (137) when making purchases.
Based on the cost-saving behavior exhibited by Boomers and
Boomerangs, one may jump to the conclusion that price alone drives
purchase behavior. However, analysis of shopping attitudes for this
segment reveal that, more important than price, this segment is very
brand-loyal when making purchase decisions.
Commoditization and the importance of loyalty
The ability to perform searches for products based on price, be it from
one’s home computer or using a U.P.C. search app such as Red Laser
on a smartphone while walking the aisles of a store, is leading to the
commoditization of products and services. This trend, combined with
deep discounting in retail, travel and other service sectors, has led to a
downward pricing spiral and corresponding reduction in profit margins.
There are antidotes to commoditization, one of the most powerful being
brand loyalty.
As we discussed above, certain Mosaic segments such as Boomers and
Boomerangs identify themselves as being very brand-loyal. In fact, when
studying brand loyalty by age group, there is a positive correlation based
on age. In other words, the older the consumer, the more brand-loyal
they become.
3
Mosaic USA is a consumer lifestyle segmentation system developed by Experian, providing
comprehensive and robust insight available for understanding the American consumer dimensions that
include demographic composition, ethnicity, socioeconomics, behaviors, habits and purchase choices.
Page 4 | The 2011 digital marketer
13. Brand loyalty increases steadily with age
Young consumers are the least likely to be brand-loyal, and older
consumers are the most likely.
Age Brand Loyals Non-Loyals
All U.S. adults 34% 35%
18–24 26% 36%
25–34 27% 39%
35–44 29% 40%
45–54 33% 35%
55+ 44% 28%
In addition, factors other than age, such as education level, can exhibit
differences in brand loyalty. While concluding that the more educated
consumer might be immune to the draw of branding, preferring to compare
products and services strictly on price, the opposite is true; the more
educated the consumer, the more loyal they are to a brand.
Highly educated adults are the most likely to be Brand Loyals
Adults who attended graduate school are 14 percent more likely to be
Brand Loyals than the average adult.
Education Brand Loyals Non-Loyals
High school or less 33% 33%
Attended college (<1–3 years) 34% 36%
College — four years (graduated) 37% 37%
Graduate school (any) 39% 35%
An Experian benchmark and trend report | Page 5
14. In fact, digital marketers that focus on brand through email marketing
campaigns find that loyalty programs can boost open rates by as much as
40 percent and click rates by 22 percent.
Loyalty mailings boost open rates by 40 percent
and click rates by 22 percent
30%
27.4%
25%
20% 19.6%
15%
10%
5% 4.0%
3.2%
0%
Total opens Total clicks
Loyalty Non-loyalty promotion mailings
The next big thing: Group buying
While understanding evolving consumers and their purchase drivers is
critical, in the current environment of hyperinnovation, it’s imperative that
marketers keep on top of consumer adoption of new technology. In 2010,
driven by consumer focus on discounted pricing for products and services,
group buying fueled by companies such as Groupon arrived as a new
buying modality.
Groupon, the privately held Chicago group couponing company, gained
immediate notoriety by rejecting Google’s $6 billion acquisition offer in
late 2010.
Page 6 | The 2011 digital marketer
15. U.S. market share of visits to Groupon.com
0.05%
0.04%
0.03% 0.030%
0.02%
0.01%
0.00%
2/27/2010
4/24/2010
6/19/2010
8/14/2010
10/9/2010
12/4/2010
1/29/2011
1/2/2010
Weekly market share in “all categories,” measured by visits, based on U.S. usage.
Created: 02/02/2011. Source: Experian Hitwise U.S.
Since its founding in 2009, Groupon has grown to more than 5 million visits
per week to take the number 25 spot in the Experian Hitwise Shopping &
Classifieds category for the week ending Jan. 29, 2011. However, is
Groupon, or more generally the category of online group buying, a fad or a
significant change in the way we buy online?
An Experian benchmark and trend report | Page 7
16. Here are three things to consider about the group coupon phenomenon.
Group buying has reached mainstream adoption
While the social buying craze started like many new technologies, fueled
by young and hip urban technocrats, the profile of the average Groupon
user has changed dramatically from the early days of 2010. Today,
you would be completely off the mark. According to Experian Hitwise
Demographics for the four weeks ending Jan. 29, 2011, the largest age-bin
for visitors to Groupon.com are those Internet users over the age of 55
(37.5 percent).
Age of visitors to Groupon.com
40% 37.52%
32%
24%
19.06%
16.02% 17.13%
16%
10.27%
8%
0%
18-24 25-34 35-44 45-54 55+
Source: Experian Hitwise U.S.
Page 8 | The 2011 digital marketer
17. The race to dominate the space is heating up
LivingSocial’s Amazon play did more than just put up impressive numbers;
it was a clear sign that the site is a viable threat to category leader
Groupon. According to Groupon CEO Andrew Mason, Groupon has more
than 500 competitors in the marketplace and growing.
U.S. market share of visits to Groupon.com
and LivingSocial.com
0.05%
0.04%
0.03% 0.030%
0.02%
0.013%
0.01%
0.00%
01/29/2011
01/09/2010
02/27/2010
04/24/2010
06/19/2010
08/14/2010
10/09/2010
12/04/2010
www.groupon.com www.livingsocial.com
Email is the driving force behind group buying
While group coupon sites have often been characterized as the Web 2.0 of
online shopping, social networking sites are not the driving force fueling
their growth; that distinction belongs to email.
In analyzing the upstream traffic to a Website, or a category of sites, it is
possible to visualize the “tipping point” of that site or category by looking
at visits from social networks versus visits from another source such as
search or Web-based email services.
The theory is that in the early-adoption phase of a new category of site,
word-of-mouth spreads via social networking sites such as Facebook.
Then, as sites become mainstream, consumers begin navigating to a new
category by traditional means such as search engines or responses to
email blasts.
An Experian benchmark and trend report | Page 9
18. While digital marketers spend a lot of time understanding and
implementing social marketing plans, in many categories, now including
group coupon sites, email remains a critical factor in consumer social
engagement.
Upstream traffic to social buying Websites
60%
50%
40%
30%
20% 17.38%
11.72%
10% 11.05%
0%
November 2009
January 2011
March 2010
August 2010
February 2010
February 2011
July 2010
January 2010
December 2010
September 2010
April 2010
November 2010
May 2010
October 2010
June 2010
December 2009
Social networking and forums Email services Search engines
Monthly upstream of percent of “Social Buying” (Cust. Cat.), based on U.S. usage
Created: 02/11/2011. Source: Experian Hitwise U.S.
During the very early phases of social buying, back in
November 2009, visits to group coupon sites came predominately
from social networks (49 percent) versus email (9 percent).
By the summer of 2010, social buying sites experienced a tipping point
in source traffic, with email services assuming the role of traffic leader.
Since most group coupon offers are driven by a daily deal delivered to
consumers’ inboxes, the fact that email services account for more than
17 percent of traffic to the category is not surprising.
Page 10 | The 2011 digital marketer
19. Let your customer guide you
There are certainly signs that 2011 will be a more prosperous year than
recent years past, but there is still significant economic uncertainty for our
immediate future.
While Joe Kennedy’s old adage still holds that “when the going gets tough,
the tough get going,” in the digital world, to be successful, the tough also
need to get smarter by understanding their customers and how external
forces such as economic turmoil alter purchasing behavior.
Checklist for the 2011 digital marketer
How well do you understand the target customer for your products
and services?
How have market conditions affected purchase drivers for your
target customers?
Have you found the right balance between competing on price versus
relying on brand loyalty? Are you leaving money on the table by
focusing too heavily on discounting?
In light of the critical questions above, digital marketers can benefit by
utilizing data-driven consumer insight from Experian Marketing Services
to develop successful and profitable marketing strategies in 2011. Read on
for more detailed information, recommendations and industry benchmarks
pertaining to email, search, mobile, online communities and social media
with insights on consumers’ preferences across the digital landscape.
An Experian benchmark and trend report | Page 11
23. Consumer insight
Consumers today are more responsive to and reliant on digital
communications and technologies. As they spend their time crossing
channels to do virtually everything, from booking vacations via their
mobile phones to researching products on social networking sites, they’re
becoming less tolerant of any irrelevant message and more receptive to
interconnected and integrated marketing.
As with any marketing campaign, the first step to success is gaining an
understanding of the consumer segment you’re trying to reach. Marketers
must arm themselves with precise consumer insight and behavioral data to
survive, and ultimately flourish, in the cluttered digital landscape.
Key findings
• More than half of Novices, the segment known for being the “least
connected to emerging technology and very resistant to adopting
a new technology-focused life,” are now sending and receiving
email, texting and visiting social networking sites.
• Eighty-four percent of Americans today email on a regular basis,
and 74 percent send and receive text messages.
• Over the last year, there have been significant increases in consumer
use of television program or movie downloading and decreases in
the use of RSS feeds.
• Compared to other age groups, consumers ages 18 to 34 are much
more reliant on their cell phones.
• More than 30 percent of the American population has little or no
credit history.
• Top visits to Flash Sales Websites include the lower income Mosaic
segment “Urban Diversity,” followed closely by the most affluent,
“America’s Wealthiest.”
• The most influential element driving purchase decisions today is still
word of mouth (54 percent), followed by information from a Website
(47 percent).
• Ninety-four percent of moms with children under the age of 18 at
home say that they are the most influential people in households
when it comes to making purchasing decisions.
• Emails sent to the Hispanic market have an average of 43 percent higher
click rates when compared to current “All Industry” benchmarks.
• Hispanic mobile phone owners are 63 percent more likely than the
average mobile phone users to represent the mobile generation.
An Experian benchmark and trend report | Page 13
24. Even the most technologically novice consumers are going digital
The Experian Simmons Technology Adoption segmentation system
delivers the mindset of American consumers, providing vivid details of
their use and adoption of technology. More than half of online Novices, the
segment known for being the “least connected to emerging technology and
very resistant to adopting a new technology-focused life,” are now sending
and receiving email (75 percent), texting (60 percent) and visiting social
networking sites (55 percent).
Email and text messaging are the most common uses of digital media
by consumers
Eighty-four percent of online Americans today email, and 74 percent send
and receive text messages. From 2009 until 2010, there have been notable
increases in consumer use of TV program or movie downloading, as well
as social tagging and bookmarking.
Meanwhile, the use of RSS feeds and playing video games on computers
has declined. Consumer usage of RSS feeds is also one of the most
uncommon digital activities (7 percent) along with the use of TV
redirectors, most likely due to the increased usage of online community
Websites such as Twitter and the increased downloading of TV programs
online, respectively.
Page 14 | The 2011 digital marketer
25. Use of key digital media in the last 30 days
Relative
2009 2010 percent
change
Downloaded a TV program or a movie 13% 19% 49%
Used social tagging or bookmarking 9% 13% 39%
Used a TV redirector 5% 6% 29%
Watched movies online 26% 33% 25%
Visited social networking sites 59% 71% 22%
Used GPS/personal navigation system 25% 29% 20%
Visited video-sharing Websites 41% 47% 17%
Visited virtual experience sites 7% 8% 17%
Visited professional networking Websites 10% 12% 11%
Sent or received a text message 69% 74% 8%
Sent or received a multimedia message 44% 47% 7%
Visited online forums/message boards 22% 23% 4%
Made a phone or video call through pc 30% 30% 1%
Visited photo-sharing Websites 35% 35% 0%
Sent or received email 85% 84% -1%
Played video games on a console 38% 37% -2%
Listened to internet radio 17% 17% -2%
Watched TV programs online 25% 25% -2%
Played video games on port gaming device 14% 13% -5%
Visited torrent Websites 8% 8% -7%
Listened to or watched podcasts 12% 11% -8%
Visited online blogs 19% 17% -10%
Played video games on a computer 14% 12% -15%
Used RSS feeds 9% 7% -22%
Source: Experian Simmons
Base: Online adults
An Experian benchmark and trend report | Page 15
26. Cell phones are becoming more important to the younger generation,
at television’s expense
Although TV and computers are important across the board, consumers
ages 18 to 34 are much more reliant on their cell phones — with only 13
percent deeming TV as the media they cannot live without, and a whopping
22 percent relying on their cellular phones with Internet access.
Media they cannot live without, by age
50%
40%
30%
20%
10%
0%
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Bo
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All adults 18-34 35-49 50+
Source: Experian Simmons
Tip: Consider more mobile marketing for the younger market and
targeted television advertising for more mature segments.
Page 16 | The 2011 digital marketer
27. More than one-quarter of American consumers have little or no credit
Digital marketers across all verticals thrive on identifying consumers who
have not only the willingness, but also the means to spend on goods and
services. Using proprietary Experian credit data, the following data points
paint a broad picture of consumers with little to no credit history today:
• Overall, 31.7 percent of the population has a thin credit file4
• African-Americans account for 20.1 percent of the thin-file population
• Hispanics account for 17.1 percent of the thin-file population
Discretionary spending segmentation quick tips
Marketers should leverage the growing amount of data and analytics
available today to help identify and effectively target consumers who are
spending on nonessential purchases. Listed below are three key points
to consider for marketers in industries that use discretionary spending
predictors to target their audience:
• Ensure discretionary spending predictors are recalibrated throughout
the year to take into account econometric changes that are often
regionally based
• Make sure you know the total dollar amount each household is projected
to spend on discretionary products and services in order to best target
the appropriate product or service offer
• Understand what other discretionary spending categories your target
consumer might be interested in; these categories are your competition,
as other marketers are also fighting for a portion of consumers’
discretionary dollars
Traveler alert: Affluent urban professionals and prime middle-America
segments tend to have higher propensities for taking cruise vacations.
However, prime middle-America cruisers have 46 percent less in annual
discretionary spending for their cruises than affluent urban-
professional cruise vacationers.
Nonprofit alert: The “greenest” consumers tend to be charitable givers
and have higher average discretionary spending abilities than “nongreen”
consumers. It is important to further segment that universe to identify which
consumers have the financial ability to give to its cause.
4
Experian® defines a “thin credit file” as zero to two lines of credit per consumer.
An Experian benchmark and trend report | Page 17
28. Even America’s Wealthiest are among those in search of deals
Flash sales, or time-limited offers of high discounts, are increasingly in
popularity across customer segments. Examining the Mosaic types visiting
the Flash Sales category allows for the analysis of what segments of U.S.
consumers are most likely to surf for affordable luxuries.
Surprisingly, the top types, by representation, for visits to the Flash
Sales category include the lower income segment “Urban Diversity,”
followed closely by the most affluent type in the Mosaic breakdown,
“America’s Wealthiest.”
Mosaic USA type of visitors to Flash Sales
Mosaic USA type (60 returned) Visits share Representation
K04 — Urban Diversity 9.79% 699
A01 — America’s Wealthiest 7.10% 572
H01 — Young Cosmopolitans 7.22% 305
E01 — Ethnic Urban Mix 4.59% 300
J02 — Latino Nuevo 7.40% 299
Four rolling weeks ending Feb. 5, 2011, compared with “Mosaic USA Type of the Online Population”
Source: Experian Hitwise
Experian Hitwise analysis5 indicates that affluent consumers are known to
engage in online deal hunting regardless of economic conditions. Lower
income segments, however, can become more active in finding online
deals as confidence in the economy decreases, exhibiting behaviors that
reinforce the theory of affordable luxury.
Word of mouth is still the most influential factor in driving purchases
Despite consumer reliance on digital devices and Internet-provided
information, the most influential element driving purchase decisions today
is still word of mouth, followed by information from a Website (47 percent)
and email sent by familiar peers (42 percent). Advertising in video games
and on mobile phones seems to influence far fewer consumers in
purchase decisions.
5
Experian Hitwise, Affluent shoppers love coupons too, January 2011
Page 18 | The 2011 digital marketer
29. Purchase influences
Highly influential in decisions to purchase a product or service All adults
Word of mouth 54%
Information from a Website 47%
Email sent by someone you know 42%
Something you read in an online review 31%
Something you heard on the radio 29%
Television ad 27%
Something you received in the mail 25%
Magazine ad 23%
Newspaper ad 22%
Online ad 17%
Email sent by an advertiser/company 16%
Infomercial 12%
Mobile phone ad 11%
Video game ad 10%
Source: Experian Simmons
Base: Online adults
Moms have the strongest influence on household purchases
Ninety-four percent of moms with children under the age of 18 at home say
that they are the most influential people in households when it comes to
making purchasing decisions. It is important that marketers understand
their target customer — especially when the target has a strong and
growing influence on household purchases. Explained below are three key
trends to help marketers connect with the critical mom consumer segment:
• As couples delay starting families, the average age of moms continues
to increase. Over the past four years, the segment “moms 35 and older”
has outpaced “moms under 35” in each children’s age category, with one
exception: children under the age of 3.
• There is a corresponding shift in online demographics, with 24- to
35-year-olds decreasing their visits to parenting Websites by almost
7 percent from July 2008 to the same time period in 2010.6
• Moms are most likely to report that they are the sole decision makers when
it comes to the purchase of household products (62.9 percent) and clothing
(60.8 percent), while they are most likely to share the decision-making
process with someone else in their households for higher-ticket items such
as automotive (77.7 percent) and major appliances (71.7 percent).
6
Experian Hitwise, Custom analysis.
An Experian benchmark and trend report | Page 19
30. Purchase decisions influenced by moms
Total Sole With someone else
Automotive 93.2% 15.5% 77.7%
Clothing 88.2% 60.8% 27.4%
Food 88.2% 54.4% 33.8%
Home electronics 89.9% 23.2% 66.7%
Home furnishings 90.2% 27.1% 63.1%
Household products 88.7% 62.9% 25.8%
Major appliances 93.3% 21.6% 71.7%
Sporting goods 93.2% 30.0% 63.2%
Source: Experian ConsumerView and Simmons, Mom’s Trend report, May 2010
Creating targeted email marketing specifically for the Hispanic segment
yields positive results
As the Hispanic market grows in size and spending power, it is important
to consider including specific messages to this group as part of an overall
marketing program. The engagement metrics show this group to be highly
engaged with email campaigns.
Of the emails sent to the Hispanic market, 70 percent were in Spanish and
30 percent were in English. As a group, these Hispanic market mailings
had 26 percent higher open rates and 43 percent higher click rates when
compared to current “All Industry” benchmarks.
Page 20 | The 2011 digital marketer
31. Hispanic market emails generate
high open and click rates
20%
17.8%
18%
16%
14.1%
14%
12%
10%
8%
6%
3.9%
4%
2.7%
2%
0%
Unique opens Unique clicks
All industry Hispanic market emails
Separating the English language and Spanish language emails sent to
Hispanic segments, emails targeting Hispanics in Spanish had 41 percent
higher open and 59 percent higher click rates than those sent in English.
Mailings written in Spanish had significantly higher open
and click rates than those mailed in English
20%
18.8%
18%
16%
14% 13.3%
12%
10%
8%
6%
4.3%
4%
2.7%
2%
0%
Unique opens Unique clicks
English Spanish
An Experian benchmark and trend report | Page 21
32. Marketers that choose to mail in Spanish should be sure that their spelling
and grammar are correct. Mailings sent with incorrect translations had
24 percent lower open rates and 3 percent lower click rates than mailings
with proper Spanish grammar.
The Hispanic market responds best to promotions with dollars or percent
off. Email campaigns with these types of financial “rewards” had 81 percent
higher transaction rates and three times the revenue per email when
compared to Hispanic promotions with “nonfinancial” rewards
(free gifts, movie tickets, free shipping, etc).7
Hilton’s campaign includes 30 percent off in this inviting Getaway email.
Experian CheetahMail’s Strategic Services team analyzed the performance and content of
7
mailings targeting the Hispanic market from 27 businesses, July 2009 to June 2010.
Page 22 | The 2011 digital marketer
33. Hispanic mobile phone owners are 63 percent more likely than the
average mobile phone users to represent the mobile generation
In addition to email, engagement metrics also show the Hispanic group
to be highly engaged with mobile campaigns. Hispanic mobile phone
owners are 63 percent more likely than the average mobile phone users to
represent the mobile generation — cell phone devices are a central part of
their everyday lives. In accordance with this trend, Hispanic mobile phone
owners are also 33 percent less likely than average to use their cell phones
just for the basics. They treat their cell phones as much more than just
another communication device.
Mobile segmentation, Hispanic versus Non-Hispanic
40%
35%
32%
30%
25%
23% 22% 23%
21%
20%
18% 18% 17%
15%
15% 13%
10%
5%
0%
Mobirati Social Pragmatic Basic Mobile
connectors adopters planners professionals
Hispanic Non-Hispanic
Source: Experian Simmons
An Experian benchmark and trend report | Page 23
37. Addressable advertising
Advanced advertising is finally becoming a reality. For the first time,
advertisers are able to precisely predict what messages will be most
relevant and engaging to unique segments of their target market. While
the industry has been pursuing the means to deliver personalized ads
for years, the recent implementation of real-time digital technology
throughout the advertising ecosystem has the industry poised to finally
deliver highly relevant and measurable advertising. 8
Key findings
• Through addressable advertising, the advertiser is able to better
predict whether a message will resonate with a specific
consumer segment.
• Addressable TV advertising spend is projected to total $11.5 billion
in the United States by 2015.8
• The integrated multi-channel campaign will become a reality in 2011,
and will build to scale in 2012 and beyond.
• A well-establlished international bank used addressable advertising
online to achieve a lower Cost Per Acquisition (CPA) and an
approval rate double its initial expectations.
• A national specialty retailer used Audience IQ to serve online ads to
current customers, resulting in an average 60 percent lift in Internet
response, as well as response increases of more than 50 percent in
both the mail-order (55 percent) and retail channels (57 percent).
8
The Wall Street Journal, Targeted TV Ads Set for Takeoff, December 2010
An Experian benchmark and trend report | Page 25
38. The evolution of the online display advertising market
Traditionally, advertisers looking to make advertising buys have been
limited by media’s rudimentary audience measurement samples,
segmented only by basic demographics. Advertisers have had to base
the performance of the ad buy on recall studies or loosely correlated
syndicated purchase behavior panels.
The Internet promised to change all of that with its ability to track
direct response in the form of clicks. But while that helped improve the
measurement of the ad performance, it did nothing to help marketers
efficiently reach their audience with highly relevant messaging.
The online display advertising market has evolved in such a way that
advertisers have had to choose between two models, depending on their
particular goals.
Model 1. Publisher or Ad Network data
• Provides very broad reach and scale
• More akin to a traditional mass-media model
• Low relevancy that requires a high number of impressions to
be successful
• Expensive
• Difficult to forecast performance
Model 2. Premium Tier 1 Segments
• Lack of scale for advertisers who want to reach millions of consumers
• Potentially attracts regulation to protect consumer privacy
• Provides high-degrees of accuracy when targeting a specific audience
– Behavioral targeting
– Retargeting
– Real-time bid management
Page 26 | The 2011 digital marketer
39. Digital advertising technology landscape
High precision
2. Premium tier 3. Addressable
1 segments advertising
Broad spectrum of
(i.e. behavioral
available consumer targeting, retargeting) (broad spectrum of
information effective marketing
tactics available at scale)
Effective marketing tactics –
but not scalable
Low precision
Limited data 1. Publisher or ad
available on network data
consumers (i.e. run of network)
Scalable marketing tactics –
but not effective
Low reach High reach
Small addressable audience Large addressable audience
Despite some of its challenges, the data-driven model delivered something
marketers were hungry for: confidence that they could reach their desired
audience. In response to this desire, marketing technology has now
evolved into addressable advertising, a third form of digital advertising that
combines precision and scale in one solution.
Model 3. Addressable Advertising
• Combines best of Models 1 and 2
• Real-time execution of online display media buys on an
impression-level basis
• Meaningful reach and scale
• High precision
An Experian benchmark and trend report | Page 27
40. This latest, most valuable advertising model has been created using high
quality, consistent data sources with meaningful reach. The introduction
of high-quality, consistent data sources with meaningful reach have
delivered a new and uniquely valuable asset to the real-time media buying
ecosystem. Through these data sets, advertisers have been able to
leverage impression level data, optimize their bidding process and pay only
for the media that is relevant to their marketing objectives. This data also
helps improve performance because it enables advertisers to align their
creative treatments to their own target customer segments.
Addressable advertising is growing at a rapid pace
The new addressable advertising capabilities are helping to create a
renaissance for display advertising. Spending on targeted display ads
will increase nearly 60 percent in 2011, helping to push online ad spending
to nearly $52 billion next year.9 Additionally, addressable TV ad spend is
projected to total $11.5 billion in the United States by 2015, according to
The Wall Street Journal.10
The next evolution, true integrated multi-channel campaigns
The integrated multichannel campaign will become a reality in 2011,
and will build to scale in 2012 and beyond. Because of the data available
through addressable advertising, digital media advertising (online display
media and televisions with digital set-top boxes), offline direct mail and
email campaigns can now be coordinated across the same segments
and measured precisely according to response rates and conversions,
effectively closing the loop on return on advertising spend.
9
Borrell Associates, Borrell Associates’ 2011 Ad Forecast Memo, 2011
10
The Wall Street Journal, Targeted TV Ads Set for Takeoff, December 2010
Page 28 | The 2011 digital marketer
41. Case study: targeted online advertising, finance
Challenge:
An Experian Marketing Services client and well-established international
bank providing personal, business and corporate banking and credit
services to customers in nearly two dozen countries, including the United
States, was looking to improve the ROI of its online advertising. The bank
sought to dynamically present ads for its ultra-premium credit card to
1 percent of the U.S. population.
Historically, however, it has proved extremely difficult to reach these
individuals online. Moreover, the CPA for a single high-value prospect
had previously topped $500, which the client considered prohibitive. With
a CPA goal of less than $500 and a desired approval rate of 15 percent or
more, the bank began evaluating online ad-targeting technologies.
Solution:
Citing superior data and matching capabilities, streamlined targeting
and rapid deployment, the bank chose Experian Marketing Service’s
Audience IQ. Through partnerships with leading online media companies,
Audience IQ enables highly targeted addressable advertising platforms
while preserving the anonymity of targeted prospects.
With guidance from Experian Marketing Services, the bank based its
campaign on the highest qualifying custom segmentation schema, called
the “Consumer Value Index (CVI).” The CVI segment includes individuals
in good financial standing with a propensity for high-end luxury items.
Results:
Through addressable advertising and other unique features, the bank
exceeded all acquisition goals in an online, luxury-credit-card marketing
campaign. Post-campaign analysis revealed that the client had achieved —
and in fact exceeded — both primary marketing objectives: lower CPA and
an approval rate double its initial expectations.
An Experian benchmark and trend report | Page 29
42. Three steps to competing in the digital advertising space
Ad exchanges, Demand Side Platforms (DSPs) and agencies are all vying
for a share of the display advertising pie. Listed below are three tips for
competing in a marketplace like this.
• Simplify — One of advertisers’ key pain points is interacting
with nearly a dozen providers just to serve an online ad. Campaign data,
targeting, and measurability have historically necessitated the
involvement of specialty providers every step of the way.
In today’s overworked and understaffed environment, marketers should
find a partner that can alleviate some of the burden in coordinating the
online advertising process — a one-stop shop for advertisers.
Companies such as Experian Marketing Services are able to wrap
measurement, reporting, optimization, data, and planning into one,
simplifying the advertiser’s life.
• Smarter ad units — One way to monetize the Internet is by making the
advertising inventory work harder. Advertisers are willing to pay top
dollar to target visitors, but have historically been limited to targeting
based on generic segments such as age, location, and income.
Advertisers would be happy to pay more for media if they could find their
target audience segment as they defined it. Through addressable
advertising, an advertiser can do just that. Addressable advertising
shows ads only to the target segments the advertiser has selected,
based on media that has been enriched with consumer insights. More
online ad revenue is created because the same inventory can now be
sold for more — all because that media includes a clearly defined picture
of its particular consumer segments.
• Enhance existing channels — Advertisers have been buying spots on
TV for decades now, using old and pre-established processes as the
basis for making ad-buying decisions. Now there is a way to bring the
same accountability of online advertising to traditional TV advertising.
Experian® partners with companies such as INVIDI Technologies
Corporation and TRA® to provide advertisers with unprecedented
precision regarding which household is tuning in to a specific show or
commercial. This audience insight provides a level of ad customization
that revolutionizes TV advertising. For example, even if you and your
neighbor are watching the same TV show at the same time, you could be
served different ads. Combine this level of ad targeting with reporting
that draws a one-to-one correlation between ad spend and sales, and
you have a recipe for success.
Page 30 | The 2011 digital marketer
43. Case study: targeted online advertising, retail
Challenge:
A national specialty retailer was looking to drive holiday sales in a cost-
effective manner. Their goal was to deliver an online ad campaign that
produced measurable results, tracking mail order, retail and Internet
response rates.
Solution:
The retailer used Audience IQ to serve targeted online ads to current
consumers. Audience IQ measured the incremental reserve of the
retailer’s multiple channels to determine the impact of online ad spend.
Results:
More than $14 million in incremental sales and an average 60 percent lift
in Internet responses were generated through the 60-day targeted online
campaigns. Although the campaigns were delivered exclusively online,
there was a greater than 50 percent lift in both the mail order and retail
channels, both of which were attributable to the online campaign.
An Experian benchmark and trend report | Page 31
47. Email
Email is a vital part of the consumer’s digital experience — from social
network alerts and mobile marketing opt-ins to search activity-based
messages and mailings sent based on preference center forms. The
advancement of mobile Internet devices and the rapid consumer adoption
of this technology have strengthened the revenue generation and customer
engagement opportunities of the email channel.
Key findings
• Email volume increases ranged from 29 percent to 32 percent from
the first quarter of 2009 through the fourth quarter of 2010, while
revenue increased from 10 percent to 23 percent.
• Friends-and-family emails have 43 percent higher open rates,
29 percent higher click rates and three times higher referral rates
than bulk promotions.
• “% Off” and “$ Off” are the most popular single offer types in
subject lines overall, and combination offers can be particularly
strong. “$ Off with Free Shipping” had the highest transaction rates
of any offer type during the 2010 holiday season.
• For the Valentine’s Day, Mother’s Day and New Year’s Day holidays,
total clicks tend to peak on the date, as well as one week after the
actual holiday.
• Total clicks for Christmas emails peak one week after the holiday,
perhaps due to interest in post-holiday sales, while transactions
peak three weeks prior.
• Consumers are most likely to open emails containing promotions or
coupons, followed by news stories and links to Websites.
An Experian benchmark and trend report | Page 33
48. The volume and revenue value of email continues to climb
The amount of email, as well as the amount of revenue that email is
bringing in for businesses today, is continually rising. From the first quarter
of 2009 through the fourth quarter of 2010, volume increases range from
29 percent to 32 percent, while revenue increases are from 10 percent to
23 percent.
Volume and revenue increases year-over-year
(2010 compared to 2009)
35%
32%
30% 29%
27%
25% 24% 23%
20%
15%
10% 10%
10% 7%
5%
0%
Q1 Q2 Q3 Q4
Volume Revenue
Source: Experian CheetahMail
Based on a matched set of 130 clients from Q1 2009 through Q4 2010
Channel-crosser:
To capitalize on the rapid growth of mobile email users, marketers
should strongly consider implementing a mobile messaging
strategy including mobile-commerce-enabled sites and email
acquisition through Short Message Service (SMS) campaigns.
Page 34 | The 2011 digital marketer
49. Furthermore, consumers continue to spend a significant amount of
time checking their email. Seventy-seven percent of consumers access
their primary personal email accounts at least daily or more frequently,
according to The Relevancy Group. While the majority of consumers
maintain multiple personal addresses, 27 percent of consumers overall
dedicate an email account purely to receive email marketing messages.11
Consumers are most likely to open emails containing promotions
and coupons
A 2010 study of online adults12 indicates that consumers are most likely to
open emails containing promotions or coupons, news stories and links
to Websites. They are most likely to forward news stories, followed by
promotions or coupons and jokes.
Likely to open Likely to forward
Promotions or coupons 78% 55%
News stories 75% 58%
Links to Websites 73% 54%
Newsletters 69% 39%
Information about new products/Websites 69% 47%
Jokes 68% 55%
Online videos 63% 43%
Podcasts 43% 24%
Blog posts 42% 22%
Links to online games/info about games 40% 26%
Source: Experian Simmons
Tip: Make it easy for subscribers to share the email with friends.
Emails including Experian CheetahMail’s Refer-a-Friend functionality
have been shown to greatly increase referral rates.
11
The Relevancy Group and David Daniels, The Social Inbox: The Impact of Facebook
Messages on Email Marketing, January 2011
12
Online adults: adults who spent one hour online in the past seven days doing something other
than email
An Experian benchmark and trend report | Page 35
50. Emails with refer-a-friend functionality
Lift in total Lift in unique
Industry
referrals referrals
Catalog 2.5x 2.3x
Multi-channel retail 15x 14.6x
Publishing 30x 25x
Travel 5x 5x
All industries 6x 5.6x
Source: Experian CheetahMail
Friends-and-family emails significantly outperform other types
of campaigns
Today, most friends-and-family campaigns are not targeted, but instead
distributed to entire customer files. Despite this trend, data from an
Experian CheetahMail study13 indicates that the perception of friends-and-
family offers being “special” continues. Specific findings in support of this
observation include:
• Customers engage with friends-and-family emails at a much higher rate
than they do with promotional campaigns.
• Friends-and-family emails have 43 percent higher open rates and
29 percent higher click rates than bulk promotions.
• The exceptionally high open and click rates underscore the opportunity
for companies to introduce new products and services to highly engaged
customers through these emails.
13
Experian CheetahMail, evaluation of the friends-and-family emails from 79 clients to non-friends-
and-family bulk campaigns from the same businesses, July 2009 to June 2010.
Page 36 | The 2011 digital marketer
51. Subscribers open and click on friends-and-family emails
at higher rates than bulk promotions
25%
20.4%
20%
15% 14.3%
10%
5% 3.7%
2.9%
0%
Total opens Total clicks
Friends-and-family emails, promotions or campaigns Bulk promotions
Source: Experian CheetahMail
High revenue-per-email results and strong transaction rates demonstrate
the significant monetary value that friends-and-family messages can
add to any email program. Compared to standard promotional mailings,
friends-and-family emails average 2.5 times higher transaction rates and
85 percent higher revenue per email.
Tip: To increase the potential of reaching new and existing
customers who might not have received the initial email campaign,
maintain sharing features in their usual location (i.e., forward to a
friend, share) while also adding larger call-outs that enable sharing
within the body of the email, near the offer. Consumers are very
accustomed to sharing friends-and-family offers, so it’s important to
make it easy for them to do so.
An Experian benchmark and trend report | Page 37
52. Friends-and-family campaigns tend to generate an average of three
times the referral rate of bulk promotions. Friends-and-family emails also
produce an average of twice the number of unique referrers, and an
11 percent increase in the number of referrals made by each unique referrer
(1.44 referrals for each unique friends-and-family referrer, compared to
1.29 for bulk-promotion referrers). These metrics demonstrate the viral
power of friends-and-family messaging and supports the branding
potential inherent in friends-and-family promotions.
Friends-and-family emails are meant to be shared
0.04%
0.03%
0.03%
0.02%
0.02%
0.01% 0.01%
0.01%
0.00%
Referrals Unique referrers
Friends-and-family Bulk promotions
Source: Experian CheetahMail
Tip: Friends-and-family emails should become part of your
overall promotional playbook. These campaigns perform all year
long — even during the fiercely competitive and discount-heavy
holiday season.
Page 38 | The 2011 digital marketer
53. Offers in subject lines are especially valuable for driving year-end revenue
through email marketing
Subject-line trends are extremely indicative of the email marketing
landscape in general. By looking at promotional mailings with offers in
the subject lines for August through December — the months when
email marketing volumes are the highest — the following conclusions
can be drawn:
• The percent of subject lines including an offer increases throughout the
last few months of the year, mainly due to the holiday season.
The percent of subject lines with offers increases during
the holiday season
50%
43%
40% 37%
33% 32% 33%
30%
20%
10%
0%
August September October November December
Source: Experian CheetahMail
Based on promotional mailings of more than 360 Experian CheetahMail clients, August to
December 2010
On average, campaigns with offers in the subject line tend to have
Tip: The holiday season is a great time to include the subject line. It
higher transaction rates than emails without offers inoffers in your
is subject lines. During the 2010 holiday season (October to December),
important to remember that emails with no mention of an offer in the
subject may still have anoffersin the body of the message, however.
campaigns with such offer had 40 percent higher transaction rates
than campaigns with offers not mentioned in subject lines.
An Experian benchmark and trend report | Page 39
54. • “% Off” and “$ Off” are the most popular single offer types in subject
lines overall. During the holiday season specifically, “$ Off” can have
significantly higher transaction rates, and combination offers can
be particularly strong. “$ Off with Free Shipping” had the highest
transaction rate of any offer type during the 2010 holiday season.
“$ off with free shipping” in subject lines had the highest
transaction rate of any offer type
0.25%
0.20%
0.20%
0.18%
0.15%
0.10%
0.05%
0.00%
Pre-holiday Holiday
Source: Experian CheetahMail
Based on promotional mailings of more than 360 Experian CheetahMail clients, August to
December 2010
Travel alert: Travel companies should plan a strategic ramp-up of loyalty-
based emails toward the end of the summer to maximize results. Loyalty
program emails, particularly those for the travel industry, tend to have higher
transaction rates in August and September.
Page 40 | The 2011 digital marketer
55. • While gift card offers are not always mentioned in subject lines, the
trends seen in mailings with “gift card” in the subject line do show a nice
boost, especially in the month of November. In November 2010,
transaction rates were 0.55 percent higher for emails that promoted gift
cards in their subject lines than they were in August of the same year.
“Gift card” in subject lines peak in frequency and
transaction rates during November
60 0.70%
0.64%
50 0.60%
0.50%
40
0.40%
30
0.30%
0.27%
20
0.20%
10 0.09%
0.04% 0.10%
0.09%
0 0.00%
August September October November December
SL per month Transaction rate
Source: Experian CheetahMail
Based on promotional mailings of more than 360 clients, August through December 2010
An Experian benchmark and trend report | Page 41
56. Holiday-related emails outperform standard promotional mailings
Holiday-related emails, before and on the celebrated dates, are a
wonderful way to engage with email subscribers. Most brands begin
marketing a holiday campaign early — many up to four weeks before the
actual date. Promotional emails sent on actual holidays perform quite well,
too, with transaction rates outperforming the “All Industry” promotional
benchmarks.
All promotional mailings on holidays: transaction rates
0.35
0.31%
0.30
0.26%
0.25
0.20% 0.20% 0.20%
0.20
0.15% 0.15% 0.15%
0.15 0.13% 0.13%
0.10%
0.10
0.05
0.00 as
ly
ay
ng
ay
an een
ay
ay
ay
y
ay
da
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tm
D
D
id
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vi
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on
w
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r's
's
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r's
ia
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er
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Bl
Fa
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M
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Holiday “All Industry” promotional mailings benchmark
Source: Experian CheetahMail
Promotional mailings of more than 400 industry-diverse clients throughout 2010
The findings that follow, based on the 2010 holiday mailings of more
than 400 Experian CheetahMail clients across industries, will help email
marketers plan their campaigns throughout the year by effectively
adjusting timing and messaging around specific holidays.
Page 42 | The 2011 digital marketer
57. New Year’s Day — Subscriber interest in New Year’s campaigns begins
to rise two weeks prior to the actual holiday. Total clicks and transaction
rates peak on New Year’s Day, as well as for the six days afterward. Early
advertising via email can help consumers plan their spending.
New Year’s Day — holiday subject lines and total click rates
50% 4.50%
3.9%
4.00%
40% 3.4% 3.3%
3.1% 3.50%
2.5% 3.00%
30%
2.50%
2.00%
20%
1.50%
10% 1.00%
0.50%
0% 0.00%
4 weeks 3 weeks 2 weeks 1 week Holiday
prior prior prior prior + 1 week
Percent of holiday subject lines Total click rate
New Year’s Day — holiday subject lines and transaction rates
50% 0.14%
0.11% 0.12%
40%
0.09% 0.10%
30% 0.08%
0.08%
0.06%
20% 0.05%
0.04%
0.02%
10%
0.02%
0% 0.00%
4 weeks 3 weeks 2 weeks 1 week Holiday
prior prior prior prior + 1 week
Percent of holiday subject lines Transaction rate
Source: Experian CheetahMail
An Experian benchmark and trend report | Page 43
58. Valentine’s Day — Total clicks peak on the actual holiday, Feb. 14, until
Feb. 21. Interestingly, transactions peak one week prior. The data supports
the assumption that many last-minute gift buyers could use reminders
right before and on the holiday.
Mother’s Day — Like Valentine’s Day and New Year’s Day, total clicks
tend to peak on the date of, as well as one week after the actual holiday.
Transactions peak two weeks prior, indicating an opportunity to begin
marketing around that time frame.
Mother’s Day — holiday subject lines and total click rates
45% 3.00%
40% 2.6%
2.50%
35%
30% 1.9% 1.8% 2.00%
1.7%
25% 1.5%
1.50%
20%
15% 1.00%
10%
0.50%
5%
0% 0.00%
4 weeks 3 weeks 2 weeks 1 week Holiday
prior prior prior prior + 1 week
Percent of holiday subject lines Total click rate
Mother’s Day — holiday subject lines and transaction rates
45% 0.20%
0.18% 0.17%
40% 0.18%
35% 0.16%
0.14%
0.14%
30%
0.12%
25% 0.08%
0.10%
20%
0.08% 0.08%
15%
0.06%
10% 0.04%
5% 0.02%
0% 0.00%
4 weeks 3 weeks 2 weeks 1 week Holiday
prior prior prior prior + 1 week
Percent of holiday subject lines Transaction rate
Source: Experian CheetahMail
Page 44 | The 2011 digital marketer
59. Memorial Day — Total clicks peak at two weeks prior to the holiday,
while transactions peak one week prior to the holiday and on the date itself.
The data indicates a higher level of browsing before the holiday compared
to after.
Tip: Because Memorial Day evokes thoughts of barbeques, outdoor
gatherings and parties, it’s worth highlighting these types of items
three to four weeks prior to the holiday.
An Experian benchmark and trend report | Page 45
60. Father’s Day — According to Experian CheetahMail client mailings, the
earliest occurrence of Father’s Day in a subject line was six weeks prior to
the holiday. Total clicks and transactions peak one week after the holiday,
including the holiday itself.
Thanksgiving, Black Friday and Cyber Monday — Total clicks peak
at one week prior to each holiday, while transactions peak one week later,
including the holiday days themselves. It is important to note that the
peaks occur after three to four weeks of consistent increase in subscriber
response before each particular date.
Thanksgiving, Black Friday and Cyber Monday —
holiday subject lines and total click rates
80% 3.5%
2.96%
70% 3.26% 3.0%
60% 2.83%
2.5%
2.55%
50% 2.30%
2.0%
40%
1.5%
30%
1.0%
20%
10% 0.5%
0% 0.0%
4 weeks 3 weeks 2 weeks 1 week Holiday
prior prior prior prior + 1 week
Percent of holiday subject lines Total click rate
Page 46 | The 2011 digital marketer
61. Thanksgiving, Black Friday and Cyber Monday —
holiday subject lines and total click rates
80% 0.18% 0.20%
0.16% 0.18%
70%
0.18% 0.16%
60%
0.15% 0.14%
50% 0.12%
40% 0.10%
30% 0.08%
0.06%
20%
0.04%
10% 0.03% 0.02%
0% 0.00%
4 weeks 3 weeks 2 weeks 1 week Holiday
prior prior prior prior + 1 week
Percent of holiday subject lines Transaction rate
Source: Experian CheetahMail
Christmas — The earliest occurrence of Christmas or related holiday
season words in a subject line was 17 weeks prior to the holiday, according
to Experian CheetahMail’s study. Total clicks for Christmas emails peak
one week after the holiday, perhaps due to interest in post-holiday sales,
while transactions peak three weeks prior to the holiday, in time for
holiday delivery.
Tip: Begin advertising Thanksgiving and Christmas sales earlier
than November. This trend, reflected in subject lines, has proved to
engage customers to click and transact.
An Experian benchmark and trend report | Page 47
62. Tips for improving email data quality
Email validation provides a myriad of benefits, including higher returns on
marketing campaigns and increased customer satisfaction. Companies
interested in improving email data quality should:
• Evaluate the current problem — Which collection channels produce bad
email addresses? Is one channel more susceptible to errors than the
others? How much marketing budget is wasted on undeliverable emails?
• Determine your email validation requirements — Which channels will
benefit? Will you leverage email validation on the front end, back end
or both?
• Identify criteria for the ideal email validation tool — Does it leverage
multiple verification techniques? Can you prove a strong ROI in a
short period of time? Will it fit seamlessly into your existing
customer experience?
Case study: improving email data quality
Situation:
Cabela’s® the World’s Foremost Outfitter ® had amassed a large number
, ,
of suspected “bad” email addresses. The retailer wanted to confirm
that these emails were truly invalid, so that it could ensure that all opt-in
subscribers wishing to receive Cabela’s communications were included in
weekly email marketing campaigns.
Solution:
Cabela’s decided to purchase an email cleansing service from Experian
QAS to identify any potentially valid email addresses in the suspected bad
email address population.
Results:
A sizable portion of the suspected bad emails were recovered, tested
by the marketing team and then added back into the retailer’s marketing
database, meaning that Cabela’s is now able to contact as many
subscribers as possible through email.
“We reached ROI on the project in far less than two weeks. The
data test had given us an estimate of what to expect from the
cleansing — but the results far exceeded expectations. This was
100 percent worth our time and money.”
Dean Wynkoop, Manager, Data Management, Cabela’s
Page 48 | The 2011 digital marketer
65. Mobile
Businesses working to integrate mobile into their marketing mix have the
ability to prompt immediate response and establish a two-way dialog with
consumers. As smartphone usage and market penetration continues
to grow, the mobile channel is a sure investment for marketers today,
regardless of industry or target market. As time goes on and technology
advances, mobile marketing will become more cost-effective and cross-
channel-friendly.
Key findings
• Mobile phone usage by American adults has increased
21 percentage points from 2006.
• Consumers are finding mobile advertising more valuable over
time — especially those containing coupons and special offers.
• While phone calls and text messaging (SMS) still dominate regular
mobile usage, taking and sharing photographs (MMS) is the next
most frequent activity.
• Of those 36 percent of consumers who plan to use their phone for
shopping-related activities, 59 percent plan to purchase from their
mobile phones.
• The most popular mobile shopping activity is checking prices
(24 percent), while the most popular place for mobile shopping
activities is the home (59 percent).
• Twenty-eight percent of consumers perform shopping activities
from their phone in brick-and-mortar retail stores.
• The majority of mobile applications downloaded are for gaming
and entertainment.
• Text messaging reaches the widest breadth of consumers.
An Experian benchmark and trend report | Page 49